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You don’t have to go too deep on the topic of disinformation before you stumble into a question that philosophers have wrestled with for centuries: How do we know what we know? That’s when it’s good to have a philosopher in the room, and we are lucky today to welcome Åsa Wikforss, a professor of theoretical philosophy at Stockholm University and the leader of a multi-pronged international research effort called the Knowledge Resistance project. Åsa will be speaking in Washington from May 24th through to the 26th at a conference called Truth, Trust and Hope, put on by the Nobel Prize Summit series. It’ll be live-streamed, so check it out in the link below.
In today’s conversation, Asa and I will explore why some people are more likely than others to resist available knowledge; we’ll cover the essential role of trust in how humans trade information; and we’ll discuss the difference between reality check dynamics and feedback loop dynamics as journalism models.
Nobel Prize Summit 2023: Truth, Trust and Hope
Knowledge Resistance
Sign up to receive updates by email when a new episode drops at: www.notyourusualdoctor.fm
Follow on Twitter: @notyourusualDr
Created & produced by Podcast Partners: www.podcastpartners.com
Website - free episode transcripts
www.in-reality.fm
Alliance for Trust in Media
alliancefortrust.com
Produced by Tom Platts at Sound Sapien
soundsapien.com
By New Thinking5
55 ratings
You don’t have to go too deep on the topic of disinformation before you stumble into a question that philosophers have wrestled with for centuries: How do we know what we know? That’s when it’s good to have a philosopher in the room, and we are lucky today to welcome Åsa Wikforss, a professor of theoretical philosophy at Stockholm University and the leader of a multi-pronged international research effort called the Knowledge Resistance project. Åsa will be speaking in Washington from May 24th through to the 26th at a conference called Truth, Trust and Hope, put on by the Nobel Prize Summit series. It’ll be live-streamed, so check it out in the link below.
In today’s conversation, Asa and I will explore why some people are more likely than others to resist available knowledge; we’ll cover the essential role of trust in how humans trade information; and we’ll discuss the difference between reality check dynamics and feedback loop dynamics as journalism models.
Nobel Prize Summit 2023: Truth, Trust and Hope
Knowledge Resistance
Sign up to receive updates by email when a new episode drops at: www.notyourusualdoctor.fm
Follow on Twitter: @notyourusualDr
Created & produced by Podcast Partners: www.podcastpartners.com
Website - free episode transcripts
www.in-reality.fm
Alliance for Trust in Media
alliancefortrust.com
Produced by Tom Platts at Sound Sapien
soundsapien.com